http://www.wtop.com/?sid=150989&nid=25

Two North Carolina men face up to 20 years in prison for allegedly operating
one of the most prolific spamming operations in the world.
Jeremy Jaynes - who uses the aliases of Jeremy James and Gaven
Stubberfield - and Richard Rutowski each face "four felony counts of
transmission of unsolicited bulk electronic mail," Virginia Attorney General
Jerry W. Kilgore said Thursday.

The indictments, returned Monday by a grand jury in Loudoun County, Va.,
were based on Virginia's antispam law which took effect July 1. Kilgore's
office launched its investigation into what he described as a massive
spamming operation that used the America Online computer network which is
headquartered in the county.

"This was a very profitable business for these two individuals and I don't
know of any legitimate business that they had," said Kilgore. Although
investigators declined to say how much income they believe the spam scheme
generated, they said both men were supporting affluent lifestyles.

"Gaven Stubberfield is number eight on the top 10 worldwide spammer list,"
said Kilgore, citing complaints reported to Internet service providers and
tabulated by spamhaus.org. Between July 11 and Aug. 11, more than 100,000
complaints on spam messages linked to the two men were reported, Kilgore
said. On at least three days, more than 10,000 messages were transmitted.

"The defendants falsified or forged electronic mail transmission
information, or other routing information," said Kilgore. The volume of
messages and efforts to conceal their true identities have elevated
prosecution of the case to felony level.

The spam included "penny-picker stock schemes, mortgage interest rate ads
and an Internet history eraser," said Lisa Hicks-Thomas, director of
Virginia's computer crime unit in Kilgore's office.

More than 50 percent of all Internet traffic across the world passes through
Virginia because AOL and 1,300 service providers or technology companies are
located in northern Virginia, just outside of Washington.

There are "1.5 billion e-mails blocked a day through AOL's spam filters and
other technical measures we take," said Curtis P. Lu, deputy general counsel
for the company. The indictments were announced at AOL headquarters.

"The filters that have been created to block out spam are such that it's
catching lots and lots of legitimate businesses now," said Bobbie Green
Kilberg, president of the Northern Virginia Technology Council.

Jaynes, 29, of Raleigh, N.C., is being held pending a request for
extradition. Rutowski, of Cary, N.C., is expected to surrender to
authorities under terms being worked out through his attorney.

According to Kilgore, Virginia has the strongest anti-spam law in the
country. While other states can take civil actions, Virginia is the only one
that can prosecute spammers for violating specific criminal charges related
to the activity.

Federal legislation allowing for the criminal prosecution of spammers has
been passed by Congress and is awaiting President Bush's signature, but
Kilgore intends to continue pursuing such cases.

The Virginia case will be the first felony prosecution for violation of
antispam statutes in the nation. Howard Carmack, 36, of Buffalo, N.Y., was
indicted in May for allegedly using stolen identities to create Internet
accounts from which he sent more than 825 million junk e-mail messages, but
he was charged with identity theft.

Atlanta-based ISP Earthlink was awarded $16.4 million after suing Carmack
for using 343 false identities to establish e-mail accounts.



xponent

Flu Like Symptoms Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to